Except that experience takes the concept of an escape room too literally and hinges on time travel that takes you, among other places like Los Angeles and Ellis Island, to 19th-century Russia where you'll be tasked with escaping a pogrom.

For those unfamiliar with the ugly history of being Jewish in Russia, a pogrom is a large, organized mob that would would torture and kill Jewish people and loot their homes in the 19th century. How is this meant to be a family-friendly experience, exactly?

The company bases its premise on a man named Arthur Kurzweil, who went searching for his Jewish identity through genealogy. "It evolves from research to becoming a question of identity," the company's blog explains. "We hope to emulate the sense of adventure, those perplexing and puzzling moments in our escape room — where there is never a guarantee of figuring it all out."

That may be fine when it comes to knowing whether your great grandmother had a bat mitzvah, but a little ominous when considering the problems faced by the Jewish community in the recent past, not to mention the ones posed by the burgeoning neo Nazi movement.

It also entirely ignores the escapism premise of an escape room, provided of course that "meet the tzadik who turned ice to fire" is not a Game of Thrones reference.

“The pogrom is not a central part of the plotline,” writes Gamliel Beyderman, a rep for One Before, in an email to Metro. “Early 20th-century Jewish immigration from the Russian Empire is.”

He goes on to elaborate that the room is about tracing the ancestry of a California family back to the Ukraine. “The violent history that unfolds around these generations is a background of the room, but does not define the main theme.”

Then he revealed there’s a second escape room in the works at the same location, which is expected to open in the fall, that sounds equally problematic: “The second room we will open in the same space starts chronologically in the Warsaw ghetto right after the Holocaust, and moves 20 generations into the past.”

The location, still under construction, was first spotted by @samkimsamkim on Twitter, who posted a photo of it without comment.